The rationale for war in Iraq has morphed from ousting former Iraqi president Saddam Hussein to countering al-Qaeda militants to its latest incarnation — facing down what officials in the administration of President George W. Bush call the Iranian “threat.”
“Iraq is the convergence point for two of the greatest threats to America in this new century: al-Qaeda and Iran,” Bush said last week, renewing accusations that the Islamic republic is backing Iraqi militias hostile to US forces and covertly seeking nuclear weapons.
“If we succeed in Iraq after all that al-Qaeda and Iran have invested there, it would be a historic blow to the global terrorist movement and a severe setback for Iran,” he said.
With Saddam Hussein dead and al-Qaeda weakened, Bush said, Iranian-financed extremists, which top US commander in Iraq, General David Petraeus, has called “special groups,” have emerged as a key reason for maintaining US troop levels in Iraq.
“Unchecked, the ‘special groups’ pose the greatest long-term threat to the viability of a democratic Iraq,” Petraeus said last week on Capitol Hill as he told US lawmakers of military strategy in Iraq for the coming months.
NOTHING RULED OUT
However, exactly what steps the US may take to counter this “threat” remain unclear, and depend largely on Bush’s decisions in his remaining nine months in the White House.
Bush told ABC News that he had no intention of attacking Iran, but vowed to protect US interests and refused to rule out the use of force altogether.
“The message to the Iranians is: we will bring you to justice if you continue to try to infiltrate, send your agents or send surrogates to bring harm to our troops and/or the Iraqi citizens,” Bush said.
Asked to elaborate on this “justice,” Bush replied: “It means capture or kill, is what that means.”
Bush repeated that “all options need to be on the table, but my first effort is to solve this issue diplomatically,” and added that he was amused by unfounded rumors of an impending attack.
RUMORS
“I’m chuckling, because, you know, from my perch, my perspective, these rumors happen all the time ... I wouldn’t say they’re amusing. It’s part of the job, I guess,” he said.
US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates on Sunday confirmed US concern with Iranian actions but said the chances of the US “stumbling” into a confrontation with Iran through skirmishes in Iraq “are very low.”
“We are concerned about their activities in the south. We are concerned about the weapons that they are sending in — that they continue to send in to Iraq,” Gates told CBS.
He said that a recent government offensive against Shiite militias in the southern Iraqi city of Basra had revealed “the level of Iranian malign influence in the south and on their economic heart line through Basra.”
In London, the Independent newspaper reported yesterday that the US and Iran have been conducting secret back-channel discussions on Tehran’s nuclear program and frozen relations between the two countries.
The paper quoted former US under secretary of state Thomas Pickering as saying that a group of former US diplomats and foreign policy experts had been meeting with Iranian academics and policy advisers “in a lot of different places, although not in the US or Iran” for the past five years.
Still, speculation has been rife over a potential US conflict with Iran, which is pressing on with its nuclear activities despite three sets of UN sanctions over Iran’s failure to heed repeated ultimatums to suspend uranium enrichment.
PROXY WAR
US Ambassador to Iraq Ryan Crocker has framed Iranian activities in Iraq as a “proxy war” with the Americans, even as administration officials have hailed the retreat of al-Qaeda due to increasing involvement by Sunni tribal chiefs.
Crocker on Friday foresaw a similar reaction in Iraq, saying that Iran’s support for militias fighting the Iraqi government may cause a Shiite “backlash.”
Yet the Bush administration has launched “an interagency assessment of what is known about Iranian activities and intentions, how to combat them and how to capitalize on them,” the Washington Post reported on Saturday.
Brookings Institution expert Suzanne Maloney said that “disastrous Bush policies fostered a sectarian Iraq that has helped empower Iranian hardliners.
“Rather than serving as an anchor for a new era of stability and American preeminence in the Persian Gulf, the new Iraq represents a strategic black hole, bleeding Washington of military resources and political influence while extending Iran’s primacy among its neighbors.”
The Philippine Department of Justice yesterday labeled Vice President Sara Duterte the “mastermind” of a plot to assassinate the nation’s president, giving her five days to respond to a subpoena. Duterte is being asked to explain herself in the wake of a blistering weekend press conference where she said she had instructed that Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr be killed should an alleged plot to kill her succeed. “The government is taking action to protect our duly elected president,” Philippine Undersecretary of Justice Jesse Andres said at yesterday’s press briefing. “The premeditated plot to assassinate the president as declared by the self-confessed mastermind
Ireland, the UK and France faced travel chaos on Saturday and one person died as a winter storm battered northwest Europe with strong winds, heavy rain, snow and ice. Hampshire Police in southern England said a man died after a tree fell onto a car on a major road near Winchester early in the day. Police in West Yorkshire said they were probing whether a second death from a traffic incident was linked to the storm. It is understood the road was not icy at the time of the incident. Storm Bert left at least 60,000 properties in Ireland without power, and closed
Czech intelligence chief Michal Koudelka has spent decades uncovering Russian spy networks, sabotage attempts and disinformation campaigns against Europe. Speaking in an interview from a high-security compound on the outskirts of Prague, he is now warning allies that pushing Kyiv to accept significant concessions to end the war in Ukraine would only embolden the Kremlin. “Russia would spend perhaps the next 10 to 15 years recovering from its huge human and economic losses and preparing for the next target, which is central and eastern Europe,” said Koudelka, a major general who heads the country’s Security Information Service. “If Ukraine loses, or is forced
THIRD IN A ROW? An expert said if the report of a probe into the defense official is true, people would naturally ask if it would erode morale in the military Chinese Minister of National Defense Dong Jun (董軍) has been placed under investigation for corruption, a report said yesterday, the latest official implicated in a crackdown on graft in the country’s military. Citing current and former US officials familiar with the situation, British newspaper the Financial Times said that the investigation into Dong was part of a broader probe into military corruption. Neither the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs nor the Chinese embassy in Washington replied to a request for confirmation yesterday. If confirmed, Dong would be the third Chinese defense minister in a row to fall under investigation for corruption. A former navy